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A89503 A practical commentary, or An exposition with notes on the Epistle of Jude. Delivered (for the most part) in sundry weekly lectures at Stoke-Newington in Middlesex. By Thomas Manton, B.D. and minister of Covent-Garden. Manton, Thomas, 1620-1677. 1657 (1657) Wing M530; Thomason E930_1; ESTC R202855 471,190 600

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call upon God as when distempers grow upon the spirit the heart 's unquiet the affectious unruly a deadness increaseth upon you temptations are urgent and too strong for you cry out of violence as the ravished Virgins So when conscience is uncessantly clamorous David could not find ease till he confessed Psal 32. 5. Silence will cause roaring and restraint of prayer disquiet Again If there be a need omit not to call upon men by exhortation and counsel as when you see things grow worse every day and can hold no longer the Kings danger made the Kings dumb son speak Paul was forced in spirit when he saw the whole City given to idolatry Acts 17. 19. When we see men by whole droves running into errour and ways destructive to their souls is there not a need is it not a time to speak men say we are bitter but we must be faithful so they say the Physician is cruel and the Chyrurgion a tyrant when their own distempers need so violent a remedy can we see you perish and hold our peace Observe again That Ministers must mainly press th●se Doctrines that are most needful 't is but a cheap zeal that declaimeth against antiquated errours and things now out of use and practice we are to consider what the present age needeth what use was it of in Christ's time to aggravate the rebellion of Corah Dathan and Abiram Or now to handle the Case of Henry the Eight's divorce what profit hence to our present Auditories There are present truths to be pressed upon these should we bestow our pains and care usually when we reflect upon the guilt of the times people would have us preach general doctrines of faith and repentance But we may answer It is needfull for us to exhort you c. To what end is it to dispute the verity of the Christian Religion against Heathens when there are many Seducers that corrupt the purity of it amongst our selves In a Countrey audience what profit is it to dispute against Socinians when there are Drunkards and practical Atheists and Libertines that need other kind of doctrine He that cryeth out upon old errours not now produced upon the publick Stage doth not fight with Ghosts and challenge the dead So again to charm with sweet strains of grace when a people need rowsing thundering doctrine is but to minister Cordials to ● full and plethonick body that rather needeth phebotomy and evacuations 't is a great deal of skill and God can only teach it us to be seasonable to deliver what is needful and as the people are able to bear Again observe The need of the primitive Church was an occasion to compleat the Canon and rule of faith We are beholding to the Seducers of that age that the Scripture is so full as it is we should have wanted many Epistles had not they given the occasion Thus God can bring light out of darkness and by errours make way for the more ample discovery of truth I have done with the Occasion I come now to the Matter and Drift of this Epistle And exhort you that ye should earnestly contend for the faith that was once delivered to the Saints In which there is a necessary duty pressed and these two Circumstances are notable the Act and the Object the Act is to contend earnestly 't is but one word in the Original 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 't is a word of a vehement signification and therefore fitly rendred to contend earnestly 2. The Object of this contention which is the faith once delivered to the Saints Faith may be taken either for the doctrine of faith or the grace of faith both are too good to be lost either the word which we believe or faith by which we believe the former is intended faith is taken for sound doctrine such as is necessary to be owned and believed unto salvation which he presseth them to contend for that they might preserve it safe and sound to future ages Now this faith is described 1. By the manner of its conveyance 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 't is given to be kept 't is not a thing invented but given not found out by us but delivered by God himself and delivered as to our custody that we may keep it for posterity As the Oracles of God in the Old Testament were delivered to the Jews to be kept by them Rom. 3. 1. 2. By the time of its giving out to the world the doctrine of salvation was given but once as never to be altered and changed once for all 3. The Persons to whom to the Saints so he calleth the Church according to the use of the Scriptures or else by Saints is meant the holy Apostles given to them to be propagated by them I shall first speak of the Object before I come to the duty it selfe and because the description here used will agree both to the grace of faith and the doctrine of faith though the doctrine of faith be mainly intended yet give me leave a little to apply it to the grace if it be a diversion it shall be a short one 1. This faith is said to be given Observe That faith is a gift so Phil. 1. 29. To you 't is given to believe Ephes 2. 8. By grace ye are saved through faith not of your selves it is the gift of God We cannot get it of our selves a meer imagination and thinking of Christs death is easie but to bring the soul and Christ together requires the power of God Ephes 1. 19. We cannot merit it and therefore it is a pure gift God bestoweth it on them that can give nothing for it works before conversion cannot engage God and works after conversion cannot satisfie God Well then let us asmire the mercy of God in the Covenant of grace Christ is a gift John 4. 10. If thou knewest the gift c. His righte ousness is a gift Rom. 5. 16. The free-gift is of many offerces unto justification and faith which receiveth this righteousness is a gift so that all is carried in a way of grace in the Covenant of grace nothing is required but what is best owed Again it teacheth us whither to go for faith seek it of God 't is his gift all the endeavour and labour of the creature will never procure it But must we not use the means of prayer meditation and hearing c I answer Yes For 1. God dispenseth it in a way of means Mark 4 24. With what measure ye meet it shall be measured to you again and unto you that hear more shall be given According unto the measure of our hearing if the Lord will work is the measure of our faith Acts 16. The Lord opened Lidia's heart to attend to the things spoken by Paul God stirreth up to the use of means and whilest we are taught we are drawn 2. Though faith be Gods gift mans endeavors are still necessary for supernatural grace
the Gospel is called the Mysterie of godliness 1 Tim. 3. 16. and a Doctrine according to godliness 1 Tim. 6. 3. men might be ungodly at a cheaper rate then now they can in these days of the Gospel now we have more means to know God and more obligations to respect God more clear and certain notions of his excellency and glory 4. Vngodliness is the root of all irregular courses Abraham was afraid of himself in Gerar Why The fear of God is not in this place Gen. 20. 11. Godliness is the great bulwork of Laws and all honest discipline subjects are not afraid of Princes nor Princes of subjects where the fear of God prevaileth there can be no true honesty without piety the first part of the Law provideth for respects to God as being the proper foundation of the second which containeth respects to our neighbour often it cometh to pass by Gods just judgement that spiritual wickedness is punished with civil See Hos 4. 12. 13. and where men are not tender of Gods Interests they do also incroach upon civil rights and freedomes Means and directions are these 1. Purge the heart from principles of ungodliness there are many gross Maximes ingrafted in mans heart as that 't is folly to be precise that it was better when there was l●ss knowledge that 't is in vain to serve God that thoughts are free if we carry it fair before men we need trouble our selves no further when men do their best petty sins are not to be stood upon that Religion is but a notion and fancy the Gospel a g●lden dream c. That such principles are within us appeareth by the sottishness of our practices and course of living for actions are the best Image of our thoughts and these are purged away by waiting upon the word which discovereth them Heb. 4. 12. and layeth in good principles Psal 119. 9. by which means they are destroyed 2. Suppress all ungodly thoughts assoon as they do arise as that there is n● God Psal 14. 1. Shame may lay a restraint upon the tongue but the heart is ever casting up such a thought as this is So that God is not so harsh but we may take a little liberty in sinning see Psal 50. 21. or that he taketh no notice of what we speak or do he cannot see through the dark clouds Job 22. 12 13. When any such thoughts rush into your minde check them and actually rebuke them least they settle into a rooted Atheism 3. Mortisie vile affections the judgement is tainted by the contagion of lusts as a foul stomack sendeth up fumes and gross vapours into the head and so the principles of godliness do quickly suffer an Eclipse The pure in heart see most of God Mat. 5. 8. In fenny Countries the Ayre is seldom cleer so in hearts that lye under the power of br●itish lusts there are seldom clear and distinct thoughts of God 4. Keep close to Gods institutions these keep up his presence and memorial in the world and so are the best preservative of godliness false worships are full of ceremonies which darken the Nature of God Images beget a gross opinion of God no wonder if people grow blockish that worship God in a senseless stock or store V●rro in Austin observed that those that first invented Images did but increase errour and take away all fear of Religion God knoweth what is best for himself and how by his own Institutions to keep up the repute of his Nature and Essence when man presumeth to be wiser then God and leaveth the certainty of Gods Institutions for additions and innovations of our own that please us better because they have 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a shew of wisdom Col. 2. 22 23. all Religion goeth to wrack 5. Let us often exercise our selves unto godliness 1 Tim. 4. 7. delight to give to God the Honour due to him Love Delight Fear to worship him often to do all things as ayming at his glory The next clause in the description of these seducers is That Turning the grace of our God into wantonness Where you may take notice 1. Of their Filthyness and bruitish course of life implyed in the word wantonness in the Original 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a word proper to luxury and the impurities of lust it is derived from Alpha an augmentative Particle and Selga the name of a Town in Pisidia saith Suidus whose inhabitants were infamous for Sodomi and weakening Nature by such prodigious filthiness as is not fit to be named among Saints and the persons here noted the school of Simon The Nicholaitans the Gnostickes and other impure Hereticks of that age were for promiscuous commixtures and the free use of their fellow creatures as some carnal wretches in our age have learned to speak without any respect to conjugal relation and those restraints which God and nature and all civil Nations have layd upon the lusts of man as if men should use no more distinction and confinement then the bests yea gave up themselves to all manner of unnatural lust as in the process of this Epistle we shall more fully discover 2. The occasion and incouragement of this wantonness which doubleth the iniquity of it and is the grace of God by which is meant the Gospel when he called the grace of God as Tit. 2. 11 the grace of God hath appeared unto us teaching us c. and in the Gospel chiefly they abused the Doctrine of Christian liberty and free justification by Christ this is primarily intended you may by analogie inlarge the expression to commit all those other Doctrines which libertines are apt to abuse yea those gracious providences which wicked men do convert into fuel and nourishment for their sins 3. The manner how so excellent a thing as the grace of God was made pliable to so vile a purpose for a man would wounder that things at so great and infinite a distance as the grace of God and filthy lusts should ever be brought to cast an aspect upon one another that is shewed in the word turning in the Original 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 resting transferring from its proper use They offered violence to the Doctrine of grace that it might be conscious to such a monstrous birth and production as filthy lusts and carnal pleasures 4. You have an hint of the reason why the Apostle writeth against them with such a zealous indignation in that word Our as if he said that grace whose sweetness we have tasted whose power we have felt of that God who hath been so kinde to us in Christ whose glory we are bound to promote shall we see our God and that grace upon which all our hopes stand to be abused to such an unclean use From the words thus opened I Observe 1. That the Gospel and grace of God in its self is not pliable to carnal purposes yeildeth no carnal conclusions They turn it saith the Apostle there is no such thing gotten out of
and included in the general promise and precept and are accordingly affected then are we sa●d to believe in Psal 27. 8. the injunction is plural seek ye my face but the answer is singular thy face Lord will I seek thus must all truths be applied and that in their method and order for there is an Analogy and proportion between them as the Doctrine of mans misery that I may consider this is my case and having a feeling of it may groan for deliverance the Doctrine of redemption by Christ that we may put in for a share and assure our own interest the Doctrine of the thankfull life that we may deny our selves take up our crosse and follow Christ in the obedience of all his Precepts The first Doctrine must be made the ground of complaint the second of comfort ●nd hope the third of resolution and practise But when we suffer these truths to hover in the brain without application or hear them onely as children learn them by rote never thus reflecting What am I What have I done What will become of me c unbelief remaineth undisturbed 7. By Apostacy or falling off from God the great businesse of faith is by patient continuance in well-doing to look for glory honour and immortality Rom. 2. 8. but now to tire and grow weary or to fall off from God as not worthy the waiting upon argueth the heighth and reign of unbelief what ever faith we pretended unto for a flash and pang 8. Desperation when conviction groweth to an heighth and legal bondage gets the Victory of carnal pleasure Gen. 4. 13. My sin is greater c. and Jer. 18. 12. Th●re is no hope c. when men think 't is in vain to trouble themselves their damnation is fixed and therefore resolve to go to hell as fast as they can such desperate wickednesse may there be in the heart of a man 2. Unbelief in part broken and so it implyeth the remainders of this natural evil in the Godly in whom though faith be begun yet it is mixed with much weaknesse Mar. 9. 24. Lord I beleeve help my unbeleef this unbelief is manifested 1. By a loathness to apply the comforts of the Gospel 't is the hardest matter in the World to bring God and the soul together or to be at rest in Christ when we are truly sensible we draw back depart from me saith Peter for I am a sinfull man and he should rather say draw ●igh to me the poor trembling sinner thinketh so much of the judge that he forgets the father though the soul longeth for Christ above all things yet it is loath to take him for comfort and reconciliation but floateth up and down in a suspensive hesitancy 2. By calling Gods love into question upon every affliction and in an hour of temptation unravelling all our hopes see Psal 77 7 8 9 10. If the Lord were the God of the Mountains and not of the Valleys we are wont to say if God did love us why is this befallen us those are fits of the old distemper Christ when crucified would not let go his interest but crieth out My God My God 3. By fears in a time of danger carnal fears such 〈…〉 do perplex us when we are imployed in Christs work and ●ervice as the Disciples that were imbarked with him were afraid to perish in his company Why are ye so fearful O ye of little faith Matth. 8. 26. filial fear or reverence of God is the daughter of faith as distrustfull fear is the enemy of it trouble is the touch-stone of faith if we cannot commit our selves to God in quietnesse of heart it argueth weaknesse God hath undertaken to bring his people out of every streight in a way most conducing to his glory and their welfare Rom. 8. 28. and therefore when the word yeeldeth up no support Psalm 119. 50. and the promises of God cannot keep us from sinking and despondency of heart we bewray our unbelief 4. By Murmurings in case of carnal disappointment discontent argueth unbelief they quarrel with Gods Providences because they believe not his promises Psal 106. 24. They believed not his Word but murmured in their Tents 't is ill and they cannot see how it can be better So Deut. 1. 32. with 34. in this you believed not the Lord your God 5. By carking in case of streights bodily wants are more pressing then spiritual here faith is put to a present tryal and therefore here we bewray our selves Matth. 6. 30. Shall he not much more cloath you O ye of little faith he doth not say of no faith for the temptation is incident to a Godly man they do oftener bewray their unbelief in distrusting God about outward supplies then about eternal life which yet I confesse is very irrational for if a man cannot trust God with his estate how shall he trust him with his soul and to a considerate person there are far more prejudices against eternal life than against temporal supplies look as it was a folly in Martha to believe that Lazarus should rise at the general resurrection and to distrust his being raised from the dead after four days lying in the Grave John 11. 24. so 't is a great folly to pretend to expect life eternal and not to be able to depend upon God for the supplies of life temporal 6. By coldness and carelesnesse in the spiritual life if men did beleeve that heaven were such an excellent place they would not so easily turn aside to the contentments of the flesh and the profits of the world men have but a conjectural apprehension of things to come of the comforts of another World as things at a distance sometimes we see them and sometimes we lose their sight so that we are not certain whether we see them yea or no so it falleth out in heavenly matters we are poor short sighted creatures 2 Pet. 1. 9. sometimes we have a glimpse of the glory of the World to come some flashes and again the mind is beclouded and that 's the reason why we mind these things so little and seek after them so little a steady view and sound belief would ingage us to more earnestnesse they that beleeve the high price of our calling will presse on to the mark Phil. 3. 14. surely men do not believe that heaven is worth the looking after otherwise they would seek it more diligently Heb. 6. 14. a poor beast that is going homeward goeth chearfully 8. Indirect courses to get a living and subsistance in the World as if God were not All-sufficient Gen. 17. 1. to break through where God hath made up the hedge argueth that we do not depend upon him as by temporising or by unjust gain This for a fit and in some distemper may be incident to Gods Children 3. The last thing in the method proposed is the cure of unbelief God by his mighty power can onely cure it Eph. 1. 19. but the means
the better side Well then let your memories be as an Ark or Chest in which the Tables ore kept lay up a good stock of knowledge that you may have truths always fresh and present with you will be an help to prayer Eph. 6. 17 18 Take the sword of the spirit which is the word of God praying always c. a check to temptations to sin Psal 119. 9. I have hid thy word in my heart that I might not sin against thee a support in afflictions Heb. 12. 5. a remedy against errour John 14 26. The next Clause is the words spoken before The Prophesies of Scripture evince the truth of it things are there spoken long before they fall out not only before the event but before the causes or remorse tendencies to such an event wise men may guess when they see probabilities and foretel that which dependeth on natural causes the Devil can many times shrewdly interpret the predictions of the word but a certain precience of what is future and meerly in it self contingent is the prerogative of God Isa 41. 22. Let them foretel things to come c. this is done in the Scripture Cyrus is mentioned by name an hundred years before he was born Isai 25. 1. The birth of Josiah 300. years before it came to pass 1 King 13. 2. The building of Jericho 500. years before it was re-edified Josh 7. 26. with 1 King 16. 34. The great promise of Christ in Paradice accomplished a thousands of years afterward the people of the Jews were ever warned by Prophesie of the good or bad that befel them Scripture was to them not only an Authentick Register but an infallible prognostication these two signal providences of the reje●ion of the Jews and the calling of the Gentiles were they not abundantly foretold and accordingly came to pass Can there be any compact here When the Jews were the keepers of the Oracles of God would they foyst in Prophesies against themselves Well then venture upon the truth of the word more than you have done God hath ever hitherto stood to his word rather then he would go back from it he would not only cast off his ancient people but send his own Son to suffer a shameful and an accursed death he that hath been faithful hither to is he like to fail at last I go on in the Text of the Apostle of our Lord Jesus That the words of the Apostles are the Rule of faith these were legati a latere sent from the side of Christ they had an extraordinary mission and call immediately from Christ as Christ from the Father John 17. 18 and John 20. 21. they had extraordinary gifts as infallibility quod hoc as to the work of an Apostle the power of working miracles c. and ordinary gifts in an extraordinary manner as tongues c. they were to write Scripture and to consign a Rule to the use of the Church in all ages This word of the Kingdom must be Preached till the end come Mat. 24. 14. and Christ prayed for no more then do believe through their word John 17. 20. and to them he said Matth 28. I am with you to the end of the world no other doctrine can we expect till we come to study Divinity in the Lambs face Once more these Apostles of the Lord were Paul and Peter 2 Tim. 3. 1 2 3 4 Peter 2 Pet. 3. 2 3. From whence Jude taketh many passages 'T is not unlawful to make use of the writings of other men Compare the fifteenth and sixteenth Chapters of Isaiah with the 48 of Jeremiah especially Isa 16. 8 9 10 11 verses with Jer. 48. 32 33 34 35 36. and you shall see how they agree almost word for word the gifts and labours of others are for our use not to ●eed laziness but to exercise industry in some cases if we speak iisdem paene literis syllabis as Melanchthon wished Divines would in the same words 't is not a fault in controversies and positive truths better make use of old words then coin n●w matter many now scoff at common truths as if Preachers did but talk like clocks one after another Doctrine cannot be varied a good scribe indeed must bring forth out of his Treasury things both new and old represent common things in a fresh savory way yet 't is not altogether unlawful to make use of the words of others where they are poinaunt and emphatical not lazily to go on in the tract but as improving their conceptions Yet again Jude an Apostle quoteth Apostles Daniel a Prophet read in the Prophesies of Jeremiah Dan. 9. 2. Peter was conversant in the Epistles of Paul 2 Pet. 3. 16. Paul himself had a care of the Parchments that is as some suppose the Volumes and Books of Scripture 1 Tim. 4. 13. Certainly the Scripture is not only for novices and young beginners but for the highest a study becomming the most eminently gifted there is a passage Psal 119. 75. Let those that fear thy name turn unto me those that have known thy testimonies that turning to him some understand of joyning with him in friendship and familiarity as certainly godly men by a secret inclination are moved to joyn one with another others make the end of turning to him to behold in him a pattern and example of the Lords grace but the Chaldee paraphrase thus turns to my Doctrine those that know let them come to know more Well then do not rest in the light you have and think that you are above these helps you may be further instructed and established if you had all knowledg there are affections to be wrought upon you may be quickned if not learn Ministers and those that abound in knowledg may be stirred up by the admonitions and exhortations of others Verse 18. How that they told you that there should be Mockers in the last time walking after their own ungodly lusts HOw that they told you he meaneth not in word but in writings they told the Church in general but the Apostle applyeth it to them places are every where 1 Tim 4. 1. 2 Tim. 3. 1. Acts 20. 29 30. in the last time The days when the Gospel was first Preached are so called in a double sense either with respect to the approaching judgements on the Jews 1 Iohn 2. 18. Little children now it is the last time the lease of our mercies was running out a pace so James telleth the carnal Jews Iames 5. 3. Ye have heaped up treasure for the last days when God was pulling down and plucking up they were scr●ping and hoarding up wealth and so became a greater prey to the destroyer 2. Or because then the last dispensation began which God would continue without change unto the worlds end Heb. 1. 2. He hath in these last days spoken to us by his Son the Lord hath now fully revealed his mind and the Doctrine of salvation is put into a settled